Signature Series https://slingershub.webs.com/apps/photos/ Signature Series Gibson Les Paul Slash Signature Slash owns more than 100 guitars. He prefers the Gibson Les Paul, which he has called "the best all-around guitar for me." Gibson has credited him with bringing the Les Paul back into the mainstream. His main studio guitar is a 1959 Gibson Les Paul Standard replica, built by luthier Kris Derrig, which he came to own during the recording sessions for Guns N' Roses' debut album, Appetite for Destruction. He used that guitar on every subsequent album he recorded with Guns N' Roses and Velvet Revolver. For many years, his main live guitar was a 1988 Gibson Les Paul Standard. Available in Goldtop, cherrybust, tobacco burst etc. https://slingershub.webs.com/apps/photos/photo?photoID=183679448 183679448 ESP KH-2 Ouija A cool limited edition of one of rock's most recognizable signature models. 10 years after the final Ouija guitar left EPS's factory, ESP and Kirk Hammett have agreed to reissue this rare and highly sought after instrument on a limited production basis. Kirk continues to play his original Ouija board night after night, but production was halted in 1999 after only a handful were made available to the public. The new Ouija remains faithful to the original with additional updates of mirror inlays and an ebony fingerboard. Available in Black, white and yellow https://slingershub.webs.com/apps/photos/photo?photoID=183677860 183677860 Brian May Red Special The Red Special is an electric guitar owned by Queen guitarist Brian May and custom-built by him and his father, Harold. The Red Special is also sometimes named in reviews as the Fireplace or the Old Lady, both nicknames used by May when referring to the guitar.[2] A guitar that would define Brian's signature style, it was purposely designed to feedback. He has used it on Queen albums and in live performances since the band's advent in the early 1970s. The name Red Special came from the reddish-brown colour the guitar attained after being stained and painted with numerous layers of Rustins' plastic coating. The name Fireplace is a reference to the fact that the wood used to make the neck came from a fireplace mantel.(Available for SH Members only) https://slingershub.webs.com/apps/photos/photo?photoID=183677861 183677861 ESP KH-2 M-II "Mummy" This electric guitar is a ESP signature model (Kirk's favorite guitar) which is based upon the ESP M-II series. Its body is composed of alder, the fingerboard (with 24XJ frets) of rosewood and the neck which is bolt on the body of maple. The bridge is an original Floyd Rose bridge. The body shows the original graphic of the movie "The Mummy" which is staring the actor Boris Karloff as the mummy. On the guitar's left horn there's written in a sort of hand writing font "It comes to life! https://slingershub.webs.com/apps/photos/photo?photoID=183677862 183677862 Ibanez PGM300 The PGM300 is probably the PGM guitar that I played the most out of any of them. It was really the workhorse, the most punished guitar, the one that took the most abuse and kept on going. I used it during the peak of Mr. Big?s success in Japan, when we were headlining three nights at the Buddokhan. It always sounded great. To me, one of the unique things about that guitar, for whatever reason, was that it cleaned up really nice. Whenever I would use the 5-way switch and click it over one click to use the single coil and the split-coil humbucker together and turn the volume on the guitar down, I?d get this really nice glassy sound. I remember playing that guitar on the Tonight Show, doing a song called ?Just Take My Heart? that had a really clean sound. It just sounded beautiful on that. There was no channel switching necessary. I just plugged it into a cranked up Marshall, turned the volume down, and got this beautiful, clear, shimmering sound. Of course when you crank it up, it was total metal. So that was the guitar that my hands have spent the most time on out of any of the PGMs. I think my chest cavity has modified to its shape. It?s a very very dear guitar to me. I?ve spent so much time with it. I love it. You will, too.-Paul Gibert https://slingershub.webs.com/apps/photos/photo?photoID=183679167 183679167 Fender SRV "Number One" Stratocaster Number One (also known as Vaughan's 'First Wife') was a '62/'63 Fender Stratocaster used by Vaughan for most of his career; it was "rebuilt more times than a custom Chevy." Vaughan always claimed it was a 1959 model, since that date was written on the back of the pick-ups; Rene Martinez, who maintained the guitar since 1980, saw the year 1963 stamped in the body and 1962 on the neck.[6] The guitar was given to him by the owner of Ray Henning's Heart of Texas music shop in Austin, Texas in 1973, it was his main performing instrument and companion. Vaughan used the guitar on all four of his studio albums and on Family Style. https://slingershub.webs.com/apps/photos/photo?photoID=183679449 183679449